Kuwait Times

IS claims deadly Tajik attack as doubts swirl

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ALMATY: The Islamic State group on Friday claimed responsibi­lity for a deadly attack against a Tajik border post this week, but Central Asia watchers cast doubt on the jihadists’ claim as well as official Tajik statements on the incident. “By the grace of Allah the Almighty, the soldiers of the Caliphate attacked a border guard post of the Tajik apostates in the Ishkobod area, near the Tajik-Uzbek border,” the IS group said in a statement released online. Tajik authoritie­s on Wednesday said that fifteen jihadists were killed during an attack on a border post that officials blamed on members of the Islamic State group who crossed over from Afghanista­n.

The overnight assault also left a soldier and policeman dead, authoritie­s in the ex-Soviet republic said. The Islamic State group claimed that its fighters killed 10 soldiers in the clashes. In a separate statement, Amaq, the IS propaganda agency, said that all the IS attackers were killed but did not specify how many or where they had come from However “the whole story is a bit murky,”, Raffaello Pantucci, senior associate fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute, told AFP.

“Everyone I have asked in Tajikistan is suspicious.” ‘There are dozens of questions’ - Tajikistan’s interior ministry insisted Friday that the attack was perpetrate­d by IS fighters-”mostly citizens of Tajikistan”-who had crossed into the country from Afghanista­n. Pantucci said that the IS claim was a boost to the group after leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed in a US raid. “For ISIS it looks good to claim,” he said. “A new leader comes in and we immediatel­y see attacks.”

IS also released Friday what it said was a video of the attackers reciting a pledge of allegiance to the group’s new leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi alQuraishi. Before the Islamic State group claimed the attack a spokesman for Afghanista­n’s defence ministry said that it did not believe the event which happened near Tajikistan’s border with Uzbekistan had anything to do with Afghanista­n.

Tajik authoritie­s said five attackers had been captured. Citing the confession of a detained attacker, the Tajik border guard service said the group crossed from Afghanista­n in darkness on Sunday into the Tajik district of Qabodiyon. “All of them are members of the Islamic State,” the border guard service said. But some also refused to take the Tajik authoritie­s’ statements at face value. Daniil Kislov, director of the Moscow-based Fergana News agency which covers Central Asia and Afghanista­n, also poured cold water on Tajikistan’s claims.

“There are dozens of questions,” Kislov told AFP before the IS group claimed the attack. “Where did the attackers find cars, which had Tajik number plates? “If they stole them, who were the victims (of the theft)? You can go on and on,” he said. Tajikistan, a poor mountainou­s country of nine million people bordering Afghanista­n and China, has been hit by conflicts since it gained independen­ce after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Tajikistan and other ex-Soviet Central Asian countries have been major sources of recruits for radical Islamist groups in Syria and Iraq. — AFP

 ??  ?? DUSHANBE: Police investigat­ors work at the site of an attack at the Ishkobod border post located some 50 kilometers west of the Tajikistan capital Dushanbe. — AFP
DUSHANBE: Police investigat­ors work at the site of an attack at the Ishkobod border post located some 50 kilometers west of the Tajikistan capital Dushanbe. — AFP

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